The ELAIS S1 field was observed by GALEX in both its Wide Spectroscopic and
Deep Imaging Survey modes. This field was previously observed by the Infrared
Space Observatory and we made use of the catalogue of multi-wavelength data
published by the ELAIS consortium to select galaxies common to the two samples.
Among the 959 objects with GALEX spectroscopy, 88 are present in the ELAIS
catalog and 19 are galaxies with an optical spectroscopic redshift. The
distribution of redshifts covers the range 0<z<1.6. The selected galaxies
have bolometric IR luminosities 10<Log(LIR)<13 (deduced from the 15μm flux using ISOCAM) which means that we cover a wide range of galaxies from
normal to Ultra Luminous IR Galaxies. The mean (σ) UV luminosity (not
corrected for extinction) amounts to Log(λ.L1530)=9.8(0.6)L_\sun for the low-z (z≤0.35) sample. The UV slope β (assuming
fλ∝λβ) correlates with the GALEX FUV-NUV color if
the sample is restricted to galaxies below z<0.1. Taking advantage of the
UV and IR data, we estimate the dust attenuation from the IR/UV ratio and
compare it to the UV slope β. We find that it is not possible to uniquely
estimate the dust attenuation from β for our sample of galaxies. These
galaxies are highly extinguished with a median value AFUV=2.7±0.8.
Once the dust correction applied, the UV- and IR-based SFRs correlate. For the
closest galaxy with the best quality spectrum, we see a feature consistent with
being produced by a bump near 220nm in the attenuation curve.Comment: This paper has been published as part of the GALEX ApJL Special Issue
(ApJ 619, L63